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Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1977-01-20

Ohio Jewish Chronicle, 1977-01-20, page 01

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OHIOjEWl
2tj^ Serving Columbus and Central Ohio Jewish Community tor Over 50 Years ^Pfc^
-1£8£ VELM3T-AVE, , ,. . /■?
VOL, 55 NO. 3
JANUARY 20,19.77 - SHEVAT1
Release Of Daoud By France Causes Uproar
■ - JERUSALEM, (JTA) - Premier Yitzhak Rabin called on the Jewish press all over the world Jan. 11 to deal more with basic issues confronting the Jewish
-'people and less with Israeli politics. Addressing an international conference of Jewish journalists which opened at Beit Agron, the Israeli Journalists House,' Rabin declared that the test of the Jewish press would be its effectiveness as an instrument to strengthen Jewish identity among Jews.
NEW YORK, (JTA) — The decision of planners of the'inaugurations of President elect Carter and Vice- ■ president elect Walter Mondale not to include a rabbi and an Orthodox priest in the ceremony's religious segment was criticized^ Jan. 12 by Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum, inter-religious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee.
, Cantor Isaac Goodfriend of Atlanta, will sing the Star Spangled Banner "to close the ceremony. Tanenbaum said a cantor singing the national anthem "is not'
', exactly an expression of Judaism nor does it take seriously the Jewish presence in America.''
(Copyright, 1977, JTA) By Gil Sedan JERUSALEM, . (JTA) - Hundreds of students joined the families of the 11 Israeli athletes murdered at the 1972 Munich Olympics in a derhonstration outside the French Embassy in Tel Aviv Jan.' 12 to protest Prance's release of'Abu Daoud, the Palestinian terrorist
' believed responsible for the Munich massacre.
Earlier in the day, the French Ambassador Jean Herly visited the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem where
.- he was given a stiff verbal and written protest by the Israeli ment to transmit to Paris.
New Relationship Needed r
American 'Recipe' Not The Answer
ByLauriZofan _. Chronicle News Editor,
j" No "recipe"'dished out by the United States will work in. establishing an Arab- , Israel. peace, ■ according' to' Asher Nairn, Israel's Consulate-general ' in Philadelphia. Rather, new relationship between the two, sides must he developed. /
Mr.- Nairn, on a visit to- Columbus earlier this week, told the Ohio Jewish Chronicle, that he is not very encouraged by what Sadat has-been saying recently. "He's misusing the word peace," by simply talking about a termination of a state, of war, but not talking, about a change in structure of the1 Arab-Israel relationship..
This new- relationship
Asher Nairn
must include, the opening of -borders, the establishing of. diplomatic relations between Israel and the Arab states, the opening of international waterways to Israel, and,the stopping of Arab propaganda against Israel, according to Mr. Nairn. •
WD Dessert With Bella Abzug Nears, Response Has Been Big
' "Working on the Women's Division (WD) Champagne- Dessert ..event featuring Bella Abzug has simply been a pleasure." Judie Swedlow, 1877 ,WD Campaign chairwoman was referring .to the Women's Division
{ 1
"^HHSP*""^
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Judie Swedlow
Advanced Gifts function
.planned for Monday, Jan. 24 at 1 p.m. at the home of Ed and Geri, Eilrnqn, 260 N. Columbia.
''I, have ..never seen so many women involved and wording so hard! It will be an .event to remember for a
, long time to come. The response has peen tre-
jmendous" ' Mrs. Swedlow said.
Bella Abzug served as con- gresswbman for the 20th Congressional District in New York'City from 1971 through 1976. She was instru¬ mental in the passage of many humanitarian and pro-
> gressive legislative acts in the areas of public work and public work jobs, aid to the, elderly and disabled, women
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 8)
The deomonstrators in Tel Aviv, carrying signs con¬ demning France for "giving
shelter to murders" tried to break into the Embassy grounds at one point but
Outrage Expressed By CRC
''The disgraceful capitulation of France to the threat of Arab blackmail" said J.. Maynard' Kaplan, chairman of .the Community Relations Committee (CRC) of the Columbus Jewish Federation, "demonstrates
once again that the blatant threats of the terrorist murderers are by-passed even by a country which so recently was victimized with the hijacking to Entebbe." Mr. Kaplan, in releasing a
(C0NTINUED0NPAGE12)
were prevented by cordons of police who set up barriers around the building.
Mrs. liana Romano, widow of weight-lifter Moshe Romano who was one of the 11 Munich victims, demanded that the French Ambassador go home. "His coat, his chair are stained with blood," she told reporters.
Herly got a cold reception' ' (continuedo'npageioi
National Federation Leader To Speak At 'Friends' Dinner On January 23rd
"If Israel feels that the ' Arabs reconcile themsevles to the existence of Israel... if. (his is going to be, then Israel will make very significant concessions," he stated...' \\ ^ -. ,■ '
Mr. Nairn said that Israel is not interested in simply recognition of the state and nothing else. He explained that in the past signing a piece of paper has just led to another war. "When we talk about peace, we really mean that we are going to stop all this nonsense of creating a background for another battleground," he noted.
"Israel's top priority business in America is to explain to the new Administration (Carter's) the type of relationship that, "we are aspiring to have in the Middle East." Mr. Nairn conceives this type of relationship as being implemented over a period of years. A bluff, such as Sadat's current statements, would surely come out in five to six years time, while the agreement is being tested, Mr. Nairn said.' . He feels' that after the Israeli elections in May,- the first order of .business for the new government will- be to work toward creating such a relationship with the Arabs. "1 think there is going to be some quiet movement in the summer of 1977."
Mr. Nairn, who has been active ■ in foreign affairs since 1956, believes that Israel's major problem today is that of immigration. "We can not lure people for better economic
. opportunities," he noted.
For aliyah, "you' nee"d people who ideologically know why they have to go to. Israel..." He thinks these people can-be found in the
,, (CONTINUED ON PAGE B)
Mr. Charles Zibbell, associate director of the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds, will be guest speaker at the "Friends" of the Columbus Hebrew School Annual Dinner on Sunday, Jan. 23 at'the Agudas Actum Social Hall, announced .Arthur Katz, chairman of "Friends."
Mr. Ben M. Mandelkorn, executive vice president of ' the Columbus ■ Jewish Federation^ will be honored " afthe dmneTfofhis 20 years- of outstanding service to the '■ ' Jewish ■ Community. A
■-"---' -Charles Zibbell special .'musical program will be presented by students
BBW, Anti-Defamation League Interfaith Meeting To Be Tues.
B'nai B'rith Women and the Anti-Defamation League are finalizing plans for their Annual Interfaith Meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 25, at 11:30 am, in the Jewish Center i Auditorium, 1125 College Ave. Topic of discussion for the afternoon will be "Adolescent Prejudice: Will the Next Generation Be Free?"
The Ant'iDefamation League of B'nai B'rith has chosen , Columbus and. Atlanta, Georgia as pilot cities-.to develop programs and ideas of ways to combat adolescent prejudice. The book"Adolescent Prejudice" published by Harper and Row in co-operation with" the Anti-Defa.rhat|on League of B'nai .B'rith, is a study that shatters conventional thnking on this subject. ' This book, seventh in the "Patterns of American Prejudice Series" stemming from the University of California five-year study of anti-Semitism in the United States, was commissioned by the Anti-Defamation League League. -
Women and men from all. religious denominations have been invited to the luncheon and will have the opportunity to hear
Theodore Freedman, keynote speaker, who is currently the National program division director of the Anti-Defamation League. He is responsible for. the Leagues' national and local efforts to improve interreligious and inter- group relations through a vast educational and action program on human relations themes. -
Mr. .Freedman holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Emory University, Georgia, where he also did graduate work in psychology. In 1965 he was cited by the Texas Council of Churches for his leadership
(CONTINUEDON PAGE 11)
Theodore Freedman
of the Columbus Hebrew School, and a visual exhibit in thelobby will highlight the history and development of the school for more than 40 years.
Mr. Zibbell helps supervise the - broad operations of the national agency. He has special responsibilities in the areas of services to large city federations, community planning, leadership development, and personnel services and Jewish education and college youth. He also co-ordinates the Annual General Assembly:
After completing 'bis service in the U.S. Army in 1945, Mr. Zibbell entered Jewish communal work at the Boston Jewish Family Service, Los Angeles Jewish Youth Council arid then in executive positions with the Jewish FederationCouncil of Los Angeles, where he remained until name to his present position.
Mr. Zibbell is vice-presi¬ dent of the National Con¬ ference of Jewish Communal Service: He has lectured at the School of Social Work at > UCLA,- the University of Judaism in Los Angeles, the School of Social Work of Yeshiva University and at Hebrew. Union College - Jewish Istitute of Religion in New York. He has written extensively for professional journals in Jewish communal service.
The affair will start with a champagne hour at 6:15 p.m. and dinner at 7 p.m. Reservations are still available by calling 231-7764 or evenings: Mrs. Morris Fleishman, 231-7546; Mrs. Arthur Katz, 864-0578; .or Mrs. William Goldsmith. 235-3661.
The .arrangements committee, appointed by the "Friends" chairman, Arthur Katz, is as follows: Morris Fleishman, chairman:' Irving A. Baker; Dr. William Gilbert; Daniel Harrison; William Goldsmith; and Philip Waldman.--

I jp
-1 ?
f '> *
11
I ',
OHIOjEWl
2tj^ Serving Columbus and Central Ohio Jewish Community tor Over 50 Years ^Pfc^
-1£8£ VELM3T-AVE, , ,. . /■?
VOL, 55 NO. 3
JANUARY 20,19.77 - SHEVAT1
Release Of Daoud By France Causes Uproar
■ - JERUSALEM, (JTA) - Premier Yitzhak Rabin called on the Jewish press all over the world Jan. 11 to deal more with basic issues confronting the Jewish
-'people and less with Israeli politics. Addressing an international conference of Jewish journalists which opened at Beit Agron, the Israeli Journalists House,' Rabin declared that the test of the Jewish press would be its effectiveness as an instrument to strengthen Jewish identity among Jews.
NEW YORK, (JTA) — The decision of planners of the'inaugurations of President elect Carter and Vice- ■ president elect Walter Mondale not to include a rabbi and an Orthodox priest in the ceremony's religious segment was criticized^ Jan. 12 by Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum, inter-religious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee.
, Cantor Isaac Goodfriend of Atlanta, will sing the Star Spangled Banner "to close the ceremony. Tanenbaum said a cantor singing the national anthem "is not'
', exactly an expression of Judaism nor does it take seriously the Jewish presence in America.''
(Copyright, 1977, JTA) By Gil Sedan JERUSALEM, . (JTA) - Hundreds of students joined the families of the 11 Israeli athletes murdered at the 1972 Munich Olympics in a derhonstration outside the French Embassy in Tel Aviv Jan.' 12 to protest Prance's release of'Abu Daoud, the Palestinian terrorist
' believed responsible for the Munich massacre.
Earlier in the day, the French Ambassador Jean Herly visited the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem where
.- he was given a stiff verbal and written protest by the Israeli ment to transmit to Paris.
New Relationship Needed r
American 'Recipe' Not The Answer
ByLauriZofan _. Chronicle News Editor,
j" No "recipe"'dished out by the United States will work in. establishing an Arab- , Israel. peace, ■ according' to' Asher Nairn, Israel's Consulate-general ' in Philadelphia. Rather, new relationship between the two, sides must he developed. /
Mr.- Nairn, on a visit to- Columbus earlier this week, told the Ohio Jewish Chronicle, that he is not very encouraged by what Sadat has-been saying recently. "He's misusing the word peace," by simply talking about a termination of a state, of war, but not talking, about a change in structure of the1 Arab-Israel relationship..
This new- relationship
Asher Nairn
must include, the opening of -borders, the establishing of. diplomatic relations between Israel and the Arab states, the opening of international waterways to Israel, and,the stopping of Arab propaganda against Israel, according to Mr. Nairn. •
WD Dessert With Bella Abzug Nears, Response Has Been Big
' "Working on the Women's Division (WD) Champagne- Dessert ..event featuring Bella Abzug has simply been a pleasure." Judie Swedlow, 1877 ,WD Campaign chairwoman was referring .to the Women's Division
{ 1
"^HHSP*""^
> H
•r *
Judie Swedlow
Advanced Gifts function
.planned for Monday, Jan. 24 at 1 p.m. at the home of Ed and Geri, Eilrnqn, 260 N. Columbia.
''I, have ..never seen so many women involved and wording so hard! It will be an .event to remember for a
, long time to come. The response has peen tre-
jmendous" ' Mrs. Swedlow said.
Bella Abzug served as con- gresswbman for the 20th Congressional District in New York'City from 1971 through 1976. She was instru¬ mental in the passage of many humanitarian and pro-
> gressive legislative acts in the areas of public work and public work jobs, aid to the, elderly and disabled, women
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 8)
The deomonstrators in Tel Aviv, carrying signs con¬ demning France for "giving
shelter to murders" tried to break into the Embassy grounds at one point but
Outrage Expressed By CRC
''The disgraceful capitulation of France to the threat of Arab blackmail" said J.. Maynard' Kaplan, chairman of .the Community Relations Committee (CRC) of the Columbus Jewish Federation, "demonstrates
once again that the blatant threats of the terrorist murderers are by-passed even by a country which so recently was victimized with the hijacking to Entebbe." Mr. Kaplan, in releasing a
(C0NTINUED0NPAGE12)
were prevented by cordons of police who set up barriers around the building.
Mrs. liana Romano, widow of weight-lifter Moshe Romano who was one of the 11 Munich victims, demanded that the French Ambassador go home. "His coat, his chair are stained with blood," she told reporters.
Herly got a cold reception' ' (continuedo'npageioi
National Federation Leader To Speak At 'Friends' Dinner On January 23rd
"If Israel feels that the ' Arabs reconcile themsevles to the existence of Israel... if. (his is going to be, then Israel will make very significant concessions," he stated...' \\ ^ -. ,■ '
Mr. Nairn said that Israel is not interested in simply recognition of the state and nothing else. He explained that in the past signing a piece of paper has just led to another war. "When we talk about peace, we really mean that we are going to stop all this nonsense of creating a background for another battleground," he noted.
"Israel's top priority business in America is to explain to the new Administration (Carter's) the type of relationship that, "we are aspiring to have in the Middle East." Mr. Nairn conceives this type of relationship as being implemented over a period of years. A bluff, such as Sadat's current statements, would surely come out in five to six years time, while the agreement is being tested, Mr. Nairn said.' . He feels' that after the Israeli elections in May,- the first order of .business for the new government will- be to work toward creating such a relationship with the Arabs. "1 think there is going to be some quiet movement in the summer of 1977."
Mr. Nairn, who has been active ■ in foreign affairs since 1956, believes that Israel's major problem today is that of immigration. "We can not lure people for better economic
. opportunities," he noted.
For aliyah, "you' nee"d people who ideologically know why they have to go to. Israel..." He thinks these people can-be found in the
,, (CONTINUED ON PAGE B)
Mr. Charles Zibbell, associate director of the Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds, will be guest speaker at the "Friends" of the Columbus Hebrew School Annual Dinner on Sunday, Jan. 23 at'the Agudas Actum Social Hall, announced .Arthur Katz, chairman of "Friends."
Mr. Ben M. Mandelkorn, executive vice president of ' the Columbus ■ Jewish Federation^ will be honored " afthe dmneTfofhis 20 years- of outstanding service to the '■ ' Jewish ■ Community. A
■-"---' -Charles Zibbell special .'musical program will be presented by students
BBW, Anti-Defamation League Interfaith Meeting To Be Tues.
B'nai B'rith Women and the Anti-Defamation League are finalizing plans for their Annual Interfaith Meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 25, at 11:30 am, in the Jewish Center i Auditorium, 1125 College Ave. Topic of discussion for the afternoon will be "Adolescent Prejudice: Will the Next Generation Be Free?"
The Ant'iDefamation League of B'nai B'rith has chosen , Columbus and. Atlanta, Georgia as pilot cities-.to develop programs and ideas of ways to combat adolescent prejudice. The book"Adolescent Prejudice" published by Harper and Row in co-operation with" the Anti-Defa.rhat|on League of B'nai .B'rith, is a study that shatters conventional thnking on this subject. ' This book, seventh in the "Patterns of American Prejudice Series" stemming from the University of California five-year study of anti-Semitism in the United States, was commissioned by the Anti-Defamation League League. -
Women and men from all. religious denominations have been invited to the luncheon and will have the opportunity to hear
Theodore Freedman, keynote speaker, who is currently the National program division director of the Anti-Defamation League. He is responsible for. the Leagues' national and local efforts to improve interreligious and inter- group relations through a vast educational and action program on human relations themes. -
Mr. .Freedman holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Emory University, Georgia, where he also did graduate work in psychology. In 1965 he was cited by the Texas Council of Churches for his leadership
(CONTINUEDON PAGE 11)
Theodore Freedman
of the Columbus Hebrew School, and a visual exhibit in thelobby will highlight the history and development of the school for more than 40 years.
Mr. Zibbell helps supervise the - broad operations of the national agency. He has special responsibilities in the areas of services to large city federations, community planning, leadership development, and personnel services and Jewish education and college youth. He also co-ordinates the Annual General Assembly:
After completing 'bis service in the U.S. Army in 1945, Mr. Zibbell entered Jewish communal work at the Boston Jewish Family Service, Los Angeles Jewish Youth Council arid then in executive positions with the Jewish FederationCouncil of Los Angeles, where he remained until name to his present position.
Mr. Zibbell is vice-presi¬ dent of the National Con¬ ference of Jewish Communal Service: He has lectured at the School of Social Work at > UCLA,- the University of Judaism in Los Angeles, the School of Social Work of Yeshiva University and at Hebrew. Union College - Jewish Istitute of Religion in New York. He has written extensively for professional journals in Jewish communal service.
The affair will start with a champagne hour at 6:15 p.m. and dinner at 7 p.m. Reservations are still available by calling 231-7764 or evenings: Mrs. Morris Fleishman, 231-7546; Mrs. Arthur Katz, 864-0578; .or Mrs. William Goldsmith. 235-3661.
The .arrangements committee, appointed by the "Friends" chairman, Arthur Katz, is as follows: Morris Fleishman, chairman:' Irving A. Baker; Dr. William Gilbert; Daniel Harrison; William Goldsmith; and Philip Waldman.--